Compared to what?
not compared to anything. its £199 at full retail so when you boil the TCO down over 3 years it costs next to nothing.
Compared to what?
not compared to anything. its £199 at full retail so when you boil the TCO down over 3 years it costs next to nothing.
That is too much. Hope MS bring Wins 9 to half that price or cheaper?
Changes to UAC weren't a fundamental part of the OS, it could have been as easily implemented with Vista.
Drivers are down to the manufacturers who produce them.
The hardware spec didn't go down, the base line of hardware went up between the release of Vista and 7, thus giving the impression that 7 flew compared to Vista.
I'm not saying there wasn't a difference, the were differences that were definitely for the better, but being able to make improvements doesn't mean it's awful.
As I said, there are more differences between 7 and 8 than there are between Vista and 7. Neither has a baring on what's better or worse than the other.
On the same low end hardware Vista is slow and XP/7/8 are fine. Ditto the UAC. Thats what consumers/corporates have and thus experience.
That said Vista can now be picked up very cheap. Even so W8 is priced out of the stratosphere.
I reckon if you did a survey of the early adopters many picked it up at the cheap price. Few bought it full price.
Yet I experienced it very differently. I never had any issues with Vista, and by the time 7 rolled around, the performance was the same, I just preferred the extra flexibility in the user interface, which is why I moved up to 7.
Yet I experienced it very differently. I never had any issues with Vista, and by the time 7 rolled around, the performance was the same, I just preferred the extra flexibility in the user interface, which is why I moved up to 7.
not arguing that pointI honestly reckon most were early birds then a lull for a while and then the OEM's bumped it backup.
Funnily enough I could never face reinstalling my machine to try Vista and just when I though, "sod it lets do it" 7 was released so I went straight to it and completely missed Vista. Not consciously but really be accident.
You probably weren't running it the typical housewife, office drone spec.
I reckon if you did a survey of the early adopters many picked it up at the cheap price. Few bought it full price.
Vista I've never seen in the workplace. I've mainly seen it on machines people give me to fix. It came on both our laptops at home. I switched back to it to upgrade to W8. It hadn't improved with age.
Hence my point about OEMs installing it on to hardware unsuitable.
I've seen Vista even now in a few places ie colleges,Job centre even hospitals to name a few,just got to keep your eyes peeled.
Yet I experienced it very differently. I never had any issues with Vista, and by the time 7 rolled around, the performance was the same, I just preferred the extra flexibility in the user interface, which is why I moved up to 7.
To be fair I think its more FUD by users then a big boo boo,I've used both from the very early days and they were ok at the very least,far from what some users make out,ie they like to make a mountain out of a very small mole hill.
I bet some users will do the same to Win9,they do like to make something major out of something trivial.
+1 its in a lot of public sector environments for sure. And like OspreyO says, it does have a habit of turning up on dead, buggered laptops that people hand you.![]()
I know where your coming from, people don't like change and when they are used to a particular environment they don't want it to change. But when an new OS comes out, and they end up having it they complain about they this, that and whatever else is different etc... .
Personally I like change, I find it exciting, I like to look at the new things you can do, and learn from them. I'm sure many of you guys here are the same when it comes to trying out new releases
it would seem that despite the overall progress made with win 8 the public and more importantly businesses will not adopt it as M$ intended due to its UI flaws for keyboard and mouse users.
Therefore rather like Windows ME M$ would rather go to Windows 9 and sweep Windows 8 under the carpet.
I can see what they are doing and as long as they don't drag their heels too much in the release of Windows 9 it will probably work. The danger for M$ is if they release another OS that the world at large considers to be a dud. The previous Vista cockup gave Windows XP an extraordinary lease of life that M$ could have done without and now they find themselves in the same boat with Windows 7.
only time will tall.
Hardly anyone likes windows 8, they are ditching metro in 9 which makes defenders of it seem ridiculous.